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August 2023 General Discussion


Chambana
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1 hour ago, TheClimateChanger said:

August hourly heat index records at ORD (1946-present) and MDW (1948-present), per Iowa Environmental Mesonet data plotter (see below). Should be close to some of these numbers the next couple of days, although that 117F from 8/1/1953 is probably out of reach.

ORD

image.thumb.png.77f4185fc76016bc7a7b60b2990bfc51.png

MDW

image.thumb.png.52d59e6202bc344439e464265bbdca70.png

I got married in Aug of 95 at a south suburban country club. Those temps were absolutely brutal.

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heat exposure is so cumulative, these brief 1-2 day shots are nbd imo 
 
Yeah, unless prolonged, temperature extremes (at either end of the spectrum) aren't really that remarkable for most people. That's why 1995 was one of my favorite summers. Hot but stormy for what seemed like weeks on end. That's why even though I was only 9, it still stands out in my memory.

Sent from my Pixel 4a using Tapatalk


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12 minutes ago, CheeselandSkies said:

Yeah, unless prolonged, temperature extremes (at either end of the spectrum) aren't really that remarkable for most people. That's why 1995 was one of my favorite summers. Hot but stormy for what seemed like weeks on end. That's why even though I was only 9, it still stands out in my memory.

Sent from my Pixel 4a using Tapatalk

 

September got cold quick with MKE hitting 32 in the third week of the month.

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4 minutes ago, Brian D said:

Not hard to see why dews are so high. Ample moisture to work with as the trees/crops just suck it out of the ground, and send it into the air. What a soupy mess. ISH!

Precip.png

Gulf temps solidly in the upper 80s will also do that, even with drier than normal soils.

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18 minutes ago, Chicago Storm said:

8259fa67f95ebdd7a04f29e3467f50d2.jpg


.

Wow, historic. This may very well be the highest RELIABLE heat index reading on record. As noted by Tom Karl & Richard Knight, in their 1996 paper examining the role of climate change on the 1995 heat wave, the HO-83 hygrothermometer had a warm bias of at least 0.5C. This was one of the reasons they were unable to confirm any impact from climate change on the occurrence of extreme heat episodes. However, other research has found warm biases of as much as 2-3C on sunny, light wind days. The design allowed warmed air to recirculate into the housing for the sensor. I hate to bring this up since I was accused of trolling the 1988 drought thread, but ironically it was noted climate denier, Steve McIntyre, who first brought this to my attention.

image.png.d671483808f42908bf82b0260b8dbf4e.png

 

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49 minutes ago, hardypalmguy said:

September got cold quick with MKE hitting 32 in the third week of the month.

I think I remember that, too. One of those years in the mid-'90s (so probably that one), early in the school year, waiting for the bus in the cold rain. I think that's when it got in my head that Septembers get cooler much faster than they actually do most years.

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4 minutes ago, TheClimateChanger said:

Wow, historic. This may very well be the highest RELIABLE heat index reading on record. As noted by Tom Karl & Richard Knight, in their 1996 paper examining the role of climate change on the 1995 heat wave, the HO-83 hygrothermometer had a warm bias of at least 0.5C. This was one of the reasons they were unable to confirm any impact from climate change on the occurrence of extreme heat episodes. However, other research has found warm biases of as much as 2-3C on sunny, light wind days. The design allowed warmed air to recirculate into the housing for the sensor. I hate to bring this up since I was accused of trolling the 1988 drought thread, but ironically it was noted climate denier, Steve McIntyre, who first brought this to my attention.

image.png.d671483808f42908bf82b0260b8dbf4e.png

 

I will say in the interest of fairness, one thing that does call into question the NWS's claim is that they are comparing 5-minute data to hourly observations. To be fair, they probably should limit the comparison to top of the hour data since we don't have 5-minute data for most of that time frame.

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1 hour ago, CheeselandSkies said:

Yeah, unless prolonged, temperature extremes (at either end of the spectrum) aren't really that remarkable for most people. That's why 1995 was one of my favorite summers. Hot but stormy for what seemed like weeks on end. That's why even though I was only 9, it still stands out in my memory.

Sent from my Pixel 4a using Tapatalk

 

I've been in Georgia for the past month and it's been nonstop heat and humidity. It's taking a toll on me.

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